styll

Usually added to the end of a sentence to add emphasis.

Adverb

  1. Usually added to the end of a sentence to add emphasis.
    • I’m no new here. So, don’t disrespect me for some new mans styll. - 2017 December 1, Roy Woods, “Monday To Monday”, in Say Less:
  2. Obsolete spelling of still.
    • ¶ So streyt that to scape col{us} had noo space ¶ This seyng Colus be styll wythin abode. - 1500, anonymous author, The Assemble of Goddes:
    • These beeing come ouer with an obscure and foggy close ayre, with many losses and a grieuous voyage, they beginne to remember what they haue past and lost: for the more that the compasse of the reuolucion, draweth neere...
    • The lady sate styll in the blacke chayre, in her prayers to God, and to the vyrgyne Mary, humbly prayenge them, by theyr specyall grace, to send her husbande the victory, accordynge to the ryght. - 1806, Walter Scott,...

Origin

Modern usage seems to have originated in Canadian slang, compare other modern respellings of i with y like whyte (which also coincides with an older spelling variant).